The Yankees have taken their hits early this season, but they have still not lost a series.
They made sure that streak continued on Thursday when they won the rubber game against the Angels, 9-3, behind six quality innings from Nestor Cortes, a patient offense and a strong all-around game from center fielder Isiah Kiner-Falefa.
With the win, the Yankees have now won five series and split the other through their first six series of the season — only the third team in franchise history to do so since 1957, according to Elias Sports Bureau — despite their growing list of key contributors on the injured list.
They improved to 10-0 this season when facing a series loss.
“It’s great to show off that depth that we have and for those guys to come in and contribute in big moments,” said Cortes, who gave up three runs across six innings with seven strikeouts. “We were 1-1 and we didn’t want to lose the series. It was very important for us to win this game and guys came out and executed.”
The Yankees (12-7) spotted Cortes a five-run lead in the bottom of the first inning and then added on late to secure the win, taking two of three games against Shohei Ohtani, Mike Trout and the Angels (9-10).
Yankees starting pitcher Nestor Cortes prepares to throw in the third inning Corey Sipkin for the NY POSTAnthony Rizzo led the way, going 3-for-3 with two walks, two runs and an RBI, while the Yankees overall recorded 11 walks, six of which came around to score.
“He’s just been rock solid for us,” manager Aaron Boone said of Rizzo, who is now batting .344 with a 1.027 OPS through 18 games.
Cortes cruised through the first four innings and did not allow a hit until the fifth, when the bottom of the Angels’ order reeled off three straight hits to make it 5-1.
But after Cortes got the first out with runners on the corners, Kiner-Falefa helped make sure the inning didn’t get out of hand.
Isiah Kiner-Falefa catches a hit from Renfroe of the Angels for the final out of the fourth inning. Getty ImagesLeadoff man Taylor Ward ripped a fly ball to the gap in left-center field that Kiner-Falefa took a slightly suboptimal route on, but recovered in time to chase it down with a diving backhanded grab.
“That was legit,” Boone said.
Instead of being an extra-base hit, it went down as a sacrifice fly that trimmed the Yankees’ lead to 5-2 before Cortes retired Ohtani to end the inning.
It was also Kiner-Falefa’s second diving catch of the game, the first coming in the fourth inning on a fly ball he initially lost in the sun before running in and laying out to snag it.
Yankees third baseman DJ LeMahieu follows through on an RBI double against the Angels during the seventh inning. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters ConThe Angels added a run in the seventh inning to make it 5-3, but Wandy Peralta later left the bases loaded by getting Anthony Rendon to fly out.
The Yankees then created some more breathing room in the bottom of the seventh. DJ LeMahieu cracked an RBI double before the Yankees loaded the bases and Kiner-Falefa delivered a two-run single to push the lead to 8-3.
“I’ve been putting a lot of work in, making some adjustments and just trying to help the team,” Kiner-Falefa said. “Not coming through in the opportunities I’ve been given before was tough, but I stayed level-headed and I was just glad I was able to help today.”
Oswald Peraza, making his second start of the season, added an RBI single in the eighth inning to give the Yankees another contribution from an unexpected source.
The infielder was called up on Sunday for the injured Giancarlo Stanton and was expected to return to Triple-A once Josh Donaldson came off the IL, but that has been delayed by further hamstring tightness, giving Peraza a longer stay to make an impact.
“I’m very excited about this opportunity that I have right in front of me,” Peraza, who added a gem of a defensive play to his left in the eighth inning, said through an interpreter. “Once you’re here, the focus is the same, to help the team. Very excited the way things are working out for us right now.”
The Yankees jumped on top in the bottom of the first, thanks in part to command issues from Angels left-hander Patrick Sandoval, who walked three batters in the inning.
The first two runs came in on a single by Rizzo and a bases-loaded walk from Peraza before Jose Trevino smacked a two-out, three-run double to left field to make it a 5-0 lead.






